The DiskMass Survey. VIII. On the Relationship Between Disk Stability and Star Formation
Abstract
We study the relationship between the stability level of late-type galaxy disks and their star-formation activity using integral-field gaseous and stellar kinematic data. Specifically, we compare the two-component (gas+stars) stability parameter from Romeo & Wiegert (QRW), incorporating stellar kinematic data for the first time, and the star-formation rate estimated from 21cm continuum emission. We determine the stability level of each disk probabilistically using a Bayesian analysis of our data and a simple dynamical model. Our method incorporates the shape of the stellar velocity ellipsoid (SVE) and yields robust SVE measurements for over 90% of our sample. Averaging over this subsample, we find a meridional shape of sigmaz/sigmaR = 0.51+0.36-0.25 for the SVE and, at 1.5 disk scale lengths, a stability parameter of QRW = 2.0 +/- 0.9. We also find that the disk-averaged star-formation-rate surface density (Sigma-dote,*) is correlated with the disk-averaged gas and stellar mass surface densities (Sigmae,g and Sigmae,*) and anti-correlated with QRW. We show that an anti-correlation between Sigma-dote,* and QRW can be predicted using empirical scaling relations, such that this outcome is consistent with well-established statistical properties of star-forming galaxies. Interestingly, Sigma-dote,* is not correlated with the gas-only or star-only Toomre parameters, demonstrating the merit of calculating a multi-component stability parameter when comparing to star-formation activity. Finally, our results are consistent with the Ostriker et al. model of self-regulated star-formation, which predicts Sigma-dote,*/Sigmae,g/sqrt(Sigmae,*). Based on this and other theoretical expectations, we discuss the possibility of a physical link between disk stability level and star-formation rate in light of our empirical results.
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